Images from the world’s largest camera, built in the Bay Area, have just been released for the first time, providing a never-before-seen look into deep space.
A decade in the making at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in Menlo Park, the $168 million, 6,600-pound camera with a lens five feet across was completed last spring. It was shipped in a secretive, intricately orchestrated mission to a ridge-top observatory in Chile, 8,900 feet above sea level.
SLAC’s camera project manager Travis Lange said last year the 3,200-megapixel camera would “revolutionize astronomy.”
The camera, now bolted to the end of a giant telescope at the Rubin Observatory, is expected to shoot photos of 20 billion galaxies, to be stitched together in broad panoramas giving astronomers ever-changing views onto colliding and exploding stars and asteroids, and provide insights into interstellar mysteries including dark energy and dark matter.
SLAC, with its famous linear accelerator used to find the tiniest particles in the universe, is known for building large, sophisticated machines using X-rays, lasers, and electron beams to untangle enigmas on earth and in the cosmos.
Additional information and images from the camera are to be released Monday.
Check back on this developing story.